Is the red a mistake?
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v0031
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« on: July 24, 2016, 07:17:20 PM »

10 Things You Should Never Post On Social Networks
We share so many details of our daily lives online, but where should we draw the line on what we share about ourselves, our family, and our friends? There are some tidbits of personal information that it is best to never share online. Here are ten of them:
1. Your Full Birth date
While you may love getting loads of birthday wishes posted by your friends on your Facebook Timeline, having your birth date posted on your profile may provide scammers and identity thieves with one of the key pieces of information needed to steal your identity and open up accounts in your name.
2. Your Current Location
Many people don't realize that when they post a status update or a tweet, they may also be revealing their current location. Giving out your location information can be dangerous because it tells potential thieves that you might not be at home. Depending on your privacy settings, that innocent tweet from your vacation spot might give the bad guys the green light they were waiting for to rob your house.
3. Pictures of Your Children or Your Friends' Children Tagged With Their Names
OK, this is a sensitive topic. We all want to protect our kids, we would lay down in front of a truck to protect them, but many of us post hundreds of name tagged pictures of our children online for the world to see. The problem is that you can never be sure that only your friends are seeing these pictures. What if your friend has their phone stolen or logs into Facebook from the library and forgets to log out? You can't rely on the "Friends only" setting because you really never know. Assume that everything is public and don't post anything that you wouldn't want the world having access to.
If you must post pictures of your children, remove any geotag information, and avoid using their real names in the picture tag or description. Your true friends know their names, no need to label them. Same goes for tagging pictures of your friends' kids. If in doubt leave the tag out.
4. Your Home Address
Again, you never know who might be looking at your profile. Don't post where you live as you are making things easy for the bad guys.
5. Your Real Phone Number
While you may want your friends to be able to contact you, what if your real phone number falls into the wrong hands. It's possible that your location could be narrowed down by someone using a reverse phone number lookup tool which are freely available on the Internet.
6. Your Relationship Status
Want to give your stalker the green light they've been waiting for while simultaneously letting them know that your more likely to be home alone? Posting your relationship status is the surest way to accomplish this. If you want to be mysterious, just say "It's Complicated".
7. Pictures With Geotags
There's no better road map to your current location than a geotagged picture. Your phone might be recording the location of all pictures you take without you even knowing it.
8. Vacation Plans
"Hey, I'm going to be on vacation on the 25th of August, please come rob me", that's basically what you're saying to social network trolling criminals when you post your vacation plans, vacation photos, and when you location tag yourself while you're still on vacation. Wait until you are safely home before uploading your vacation pics or talking about your vacation online. Is "checking in" at that fancy restaurant really worth giving up your location information to potential criminals?
9. Embarrassing Things you Wouldn't Want Shared With Your Employer or Family
Before you post anything online, think to yourself, would I want my boss or family to see this? If not, don't post it. Even if you post something and delete it, doesn't mean that someone didn't take a screenshot of it before you had the chance to remove it.
10. Information About Your Current Job or Work-related Projects
Talking about work-related things on social networks is a bad idea. Even an innocent status update about how mad you are about missing a deadline on a project could provide valuable information to your competitors that they could leverage against your company.


Should it be to share?
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cxs018
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #1 on: July 25, 2016, 12:37:58 AM »

Both would work in that context.
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